MIRAMAR, fla. — Spirit Airlines has been hit with a federal lawsuit that claims it misled passengers by implying that a usage fee was a government-required charge.

A Miami law firm has filed a class-action lawsuit against Spirit over fees that were allegedly baseless and misleading.

While the airline is famous for its abundance of extra charges — including for carry-on bags and seat selection — the suit focuses on “passenger usage fees.”

Spirit says on its website that those fees range from $8.99 to $16.99 each way; in regulatory filings, the publicly traded company says it charges those fees for sales on its website, by phone and through travel agents in order to cover distribution costs.

The lawsuit, filed late Monday in the federal court’s South Florida district, claims that Spirit actively misrepresented the cost of airfare by making the usage fee appear to be a government-required tax or charge.

“By means of omissions and misrepresentations, Spirit misleads consumers to believe that the (passenger usage fee) is an official government tax or fee when, in reality, the fee is nothing more than additional airfare because Spirit does not provide any bona fide service in exchange for the (fee),” the suit says.

Through a spokeswoman, Spirit denied the claims.

“Spirit believes the claims are without merit and intends to defend the case,” spokeswoman Misty Pinson said in an e-mail Tuesday.

Katherine Ezell, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, said that while one named class member is included in the suit — a New Jersey businessman — more will be added. The law firm estimates that as many as 20 million passengers could have been affected by the fees over the past four to six years.

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